Outrage in Germany after neo-Nazi rally forces mayor’s resignation

Senior politicians in Germany have expressed outrage that the mayor of the eastern German town of Troeglitz was forced to resign after local authorities failed to stop a protest by the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD) outside his house.

Markus Nierth, the elected mayor of Troeglitz, said Monday that
he had resigned because he feared for his family’s safety after
the NPD was allowed to hold a rally outside his home to protest
against his plans to house asylum seekers in the town.

It comes as the far-right continues to gain support across
Germany amid an increase in asylum seekers. The number of asylum
seekers in the country jumped 60 percent last year, according to
the Federal Statistics Office.

"It's about my children and my wife fearing the arrival of
truckloads of neo-Nazis...their kind, peaceful faces looking
through our windows and...letting us hear their loving
slogans," Nierth wrote on Facebook.

Justice Minister Heiko Maas, a Social Democrat who shares power
with Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats, said the mayor’s
resignation was a “tragedy for our democracy.”

Cem Oezdemir, co-leader of the Greens, used stronger words.

“If an elected mayor does not feel protected from a brown mob
in our democracy, all alarm bells must be ringing,” he said,
referring to the brown uniforms of the SS under Hitler.

The problem of immigration into Germany has been highlighted in
recent months by the anti-immigration group PEGIDA (Patriotic
Europeans Against The Islamization of the West). The group has
held several demonstrations in Dresden and has been fueling
anti-Muslim sentiments in the wake of the Charlie Hebdo terror
attacks in Paris.

While polls show that Merkel’s government is not paying enough
attention to people’s worries about immigration, Germans have
also been embarrassed by the anti-immigration tone of PEGIDA.
There have been a number of counter-demonstrations against the
group across Germany.